The Macro Trader

Archive for the 'Fixed Income' Category

Gold and TIPS Diverging

Since the Match 2009 bottom many correlations have held extremely well.  We covered one in a previous post titled “US Dollar Correlation Breaking Down” and other ones here.  We can now add one more broken correlation to the mix.  TIPS and GOLD have been trading very much inline with each other over the last nine months or so.  The primary reason for the correlation is that since they are both seen as inflation hedges they should trade together.

As you can see in the chart below gold and TIPS have trade very much in line for most of the last nine months.  Over the past two weeks however the two instruments have diverged with TIPS going higher and gold going lower. 

GLD-Gold ETF and TIP-TIPS ETF

gold-tips-overlay

So the big questions are why are these diverging and how can we make money from it.  You irst have to decide if you think inflation is going up or down and if you think TIPS and Gold are good inflation hedges.  If gold is a good hedge and you think that inflation is going to increase then you would want to be a buyer of gold.  If you think that inflation is set to decrease or that inflation expectations are overdone then you would likely want to short TIPS.  The other main way to trade this is to bet on a convergence and a return to correlation.  To take advantage of this you could buy gold and short TIPS.

Happy Trading,

Dave@TheMacroTrader.com

Disclaimer-No positions in the securities mentioned.

Global Interest Rate Outlook

It has been a while since the last time we posted our global GDP weighted yield curve.  While it has been months it might as well have been a day as nothing has really changed.  After being inverted for all of 2007 and most of 2008 the yield curve flipped and became extremely positive as central banks worldwide lowered short term rates.  You can see this very clearly in the chart below of the G-10 nations short and long term rates. In spite of Australia raising theirs, short term interest rates remain extremely low everywhere else.

G-10 Short and Long Term Interest Rates

g10-long-and-short-interest-rates

Another way to look at interest rates and in fact the title of this post is by using the global GDP weighted yield curve.  In the chart below you can see the global yield curve.  While it has fluctuated it has essentially gone nowhere for the last eight months.

Global GDP Weighted Yield Curve

gdp-weighted-global-yield-curve

So whats The Macro Traders outlook?  We think that things will remain more or less the same for most if not all of 2010.  On the deflationary side banks have not started to lend, real estate is not going up anytime soon, debt deleveraging is in overdrive, unemployment is as bad as ever, etc.  On the inflation side commodities are up, stocks are up, and bonds are up.  At best we would call this a standstill.  So while we could envision long term rates going higher on credit risk, yes we think that sovereign debt is full of credit risk, we think that short term rates will remain low for most if not all of 2010.

Happy Trading,

Dave@TheMacroTrader.com

Disclaimer-The Macro Trader is long TLT

Favorable Risk to Reward in Treasuries

While many investors are calling for a large drop in long term Treasuries we are currently seeing a good risk reward trade to the long side in the long bond.  In the chart below you can see our reversion to the mean chart on the 30-year Treasury yield.  When it is stretched to the downside things are bearish and when it is stretched to the upside it is bullish.  Right now it is stretched almost 1.5 standard deviations away from its historical mean which usually leads to a move lower in yields and a move higher in bond prices. (Click on chart twice to enlarge)

30-Year Yield Reversion to the Mean Chart

tyx-30-year-treasury-yield-rtm-chart

As you can see in the chart below of the 30-Year Treasury yield we are at the top of a long term downtrend in yield.  Each time since the 1987 that yields have hit this line they have gone lower.  Eventually this will stop and yields will breakout to the upside but if history is any guide and the trend continues than at least for now yields are once again headed lower. (Click on chart twice to enlarge)

30-Year Treasury Yield

tyx-30-year-treasury-bond-yield-long-term-chart

Finally lets look at the LT 20+ year Treasury bond ETF.  As you can see below it has found support over the last seven months in the highlighted $86-89 range.  On the upside we have resistance around $98.  The risk to reward is quite favorable right now as we can risk $1-2 with an upside around $9.  (Click on chart twice to enlarge)

TLT-20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF

tlt-one-year-chart

So while this may be the time that Treasuries tank and yields go screaming higher we doubt it and are modestly positioned to the long side.  Eventually we will be shorting Treasuries but not until yields break out and end the trend that has been in place for over 20 years.

Happy Trading,

Dave@TheMacroTrader.com

Disclaimer-The Macro Trader is currently long TLT

Interest Rates and the MOVE Index

We keep hearing that long term Treasury Bonds are going to tank and that we need to get short before they fall off a cliff.  While this may very well happen, we doubt that it occurs anytime soon.  We are not alone in this view as Bill Gross and the gang at PIMCO seem to agree.  While some argue with his view of a new slow growth period the market does not seem to have an issue with it.  Not only has Helicopter Ben said that the Fed is not raising rates anytime soon, but market indicators are saying the same thing.

One Treasury indicator that we use is the MOVE index which is a  “yield curve weighted index of the normalized implied volatility on 1-month Treasury options. It is the weighted average of volatilities on the CT2, CT5, CT10, and CT30.”  As you can see in the chart below it has been falling since July as the market has come to the realization that we are in for a slow growth period and that the Fed is not going to raise rates any time soon.

MOVE Index

move-treasury-volatility-index

Happy Trading,

Dave@TheMacroTrader.com

Disclaimer-The Macro Trader is currently long AGG

If you’re getting value out of our posts, you can do us a favor by linking to us and mentioning The Macro Trader to friends and co-workers. Here’s the link information for this article:
Title: Interest Rates and the MOVE Index
URL: http://www.themacrotrader.com/2009/11/18/interest-rates-move-index/

G-10 Interest Rate Trends

While a lot has been made of the RBA raising Australia’s short term rates over the last week the fact is that most of the world is not doing quite as well.  Whereas Australia actually has some inflation the United States, Japan, and Europe are still not growing and rates are likely to stay around their current levels for at least a few more quarters.

Australia on the other hand was able to avoid a large part of the current global recession by supplying Asia, namely China, with commodities.  As you can see  in the chart below the short term rates have climbed but in spite of this the long term rates are still basically unchanged. (click on chart to enlarge)

Australia Interest Rates

australia-interest-rate-trends

Looking at the G-10 as a group we can see that rates are low and aside from Australia and New Zealand rates are essentially unchanged for the past six months as central banks continue to fight deflation and disinflation.  The trend is flat and likely to stay that way. (click on chart to enlarge)

G-10 Short Term Interest Rates

g-10-short-term-interest-rates

With the current rally and all the talk of inflation you would expect that long term rates would be climbing but instead they are flat to trending lower in every single G-10 country.  Treasury bonds night be in the bubble of a lifetime but we are not seeing that yet with lower rates and extremely slow global growth, especially in the developed world. (click on chart to enlarge)

G-10 10-Year Interest Rates

g-10-10-year-interest-rates

If you want to see a cleaner chart with the average G-10 long and short term rate you can look at the chart below where we have taken a simple average of G-10 long and short term interest rates.  As you can see everything has remained the same for a few months now. (click on chart to enlarge)

G-10 Interest Rates

g-10-10-year-interest-rates1

Finally lets look at the whole investable world.  As you can see in the chart below the Global GDP weighted yield curve has been flat since May 2009 with very little change.  If inflation is hitting the world right now then it would appear as though bond investors are clueless.  In our experience bond investors are rarely clueless and we are inclined to bet with them.  Right now we are looking at potentially re-entering our long bond trade as investors come to the realization that we, along with investors such as PIMPCO (maybe its PIMCO but the way that Bill Gross ran the Fed last winter we can’t help ourselves) , see slow to negative global growth over the next year and probably for the next few years as the worlds financial system rebuilds, assuming we get that far. (click on chart to enlarge)

Global GDP Weighted Yield Curve

global-gdp-weighted-yield-curve

Happy Trading,

Dave@TheMacroTrader.com

Disclaimer-We are long some GLD, DBV, and HYG

If you’re getting value out of our posts, you can do us a favor by linking to us and mentioning The Macro Trader to friends and co-workers. Here’s the link information for this article:
Title: G-10 Interest Rate Trends
URL: http://www.themacrotrader.com/2009/10/16/g-10-interest-rate-trends-macro-trading/

One Question, One Sentence Answer, and One Chart

Why are bonds going up at the same time that gold is climbing? Real yields are the highest that they have been since the late 1980′s and the third highest in the last 100 years, investors expecting slow to negative inflation and growth are buying and will keep buying as they grasp for yield. (click on chart to enlarge)

10-Year T-Note Real Yield

10-yr-t-note-real-yield

Why has the SP500 continued higher even when earnings have been weak and unsustainable and demand has been virtually non-existent?  There are several contributing factors such as the oversold condition, sentiment, etc. but our favorite one is that the Government is debasing our currency and in the process it is driving asset prices but not their actual values higher, if your investment in the SP500 is up but the actual value of your dollar is equally low then have you actually made any money? (click on chart to enlarge)

SP500 and US Dollar Index

spy-sp500-etf-and-us-dollar-index

If we are in a deflationary environment then why is gold climbing higher?  No one wants to hold the US Dollar so instead of being a inflation/deflation play the current move of gold is based more on the devaluation of the US Dollar than anything else-It’s a currency trade. (click on chart to enlarge)

GLD-Gold ETF and US Dollar Index

gld-gold-etf-and-us-dollar-index

If housing is cheap, interest rates are low, and everyone wants to trade their US Dollars for other assets than why aren’t housing sales going through the roof?  While your mortgage broker may be calling and saying that rates are at or close to all time lows the reality is that real rates are at their highest levels since 1987, cheap money my #%$. (click on chart to enlarge)

Real 30-Year Fixed Mortgage Rates

real-30-year-fixed-mortgage-rates

If demand is so weak than why has oil been so strong?  Once again it gets back to not wanting to hold US Dollars, when the USD bounces oil will likely get hit hard. (click on chart to enlarge)

West Texas Crude Oil and US Dollar Index

wtic-crude-oil-versus-the-us-dollar

Happy Trading,

Dave@TheMacroTrader.com

Disclaimer-We are long some GLD-Gold ETF

If you’re getting value out of our posts, you can do us a favor by linking to us and mentioning The Macro Trader to friends and co-workers. Here’s the link information for this article:
Title: One Question, One Sentence, and One Chart Answers
URL: http://www.themacrotrader.com/2009/10/08/macro-trading-one-chart-answers/

Give Me Fuel Give Me Fire

Gimme fuel, gimme fire, gimme that which I desire,

Can’t fight the need for speed,

I’m loose, I’m clean, I’m burning lean and mean, and mean.

Ignite the open trail,

Excite, exhale, comin on, hot from hell, yeah hot from hell.

-Metallica “Fuel for Fire”

Where has all of the money gone? We know that the world should be running out of green ink any day now due to the Treasury printing money 24/7, but with all of this money coming into the economy we would have expected runaway inflation.  Up to now we have seen, for the first time in decades, steady deflation.  In fact as you can see in the chart below, since 3/1/09 YoY CPI has been negative. (click on chart to enlarge)

CPI 12-Month % Change

cpi-year-over-year-inflation

One reason why we have not seen any inflation is due to the personal savings rate going up and private sector leverage going down.  For baby boomers and really anyone who has been investing for the last 15 years, things are looking bad.  From 1995 to now, investors using a 70/30 stock bond mix, rebalanced monthly and adjusted for inflation, have seen a CAGR of only 3.89%.  Add to that the debt loads that most people have, and it makes sense that the personal savings rate has shot higher and from all estimates looks to be going higher still. (click on chart to enlarge)

Personal Savings Rate

personal-savings-rate

So the question remains where has all the money gone?  Looking at the  WSBASE which defined by the St Louis Fed as the sum of currency in circulation, reserve balances with the Federal Reserve Banks, and service-related adjustments to compensate for float-it is obvious that overall money supply has absolutely exploded to the upside. (click on chart to enlarge)

WSBASE

wsbase

So where has all of this money gone if not into the general economy? In a relationship first pointed out by Andy Kessler, the WSBASE has tracked tradeable assets like the SP500 and corporate bonds since the March bottom.  If you look at the two charts below you can see that movement in the WSBASE has led the SP500 and Dow Jones Corporate Bond Index by about a month. (click on charts to enlarge)

SP500 and WSBASE

sp500-and-wsbase-currency-in-circulation

DJCB and WSBASE

djcb-and-wsbase-currency-in-circulation

When no one else wanted to own assets the Fed stepped in and became the buyer of corporate assets and has been the fuel that has driven this market higher.  In a vacuum this is not a bad thing, but we are not in a vacuum.  With the government putting all of the money into tradeable assets and not into the real economy, we end up with a market that could go down in flames at any moment.  What happens if the Fed backs away and stops buying?  If they stop buying, we run the risk of everything falling again and taking us right back to where we were.

The Fed in their infinite wisdom and bubble loving culture, continues to trade one bubble for another.  This time however, it appears as thought the bubble has not only been engineered by the Fed, but they have been the driving force behind it all.  As opposed to the housing bubble–where the Fed lowered rates and left them low but allowed people to build the bubble with their stupid home buying–this time the Fed lowered the rates, borrowed the money, and is spending the money.  Unfortunately for us when the bubble pops “the money” is really our money, and we come out on the losing end….again.

Happy Trading,

Dave@TheMacroTrader.com

Disclaimer-In our weekly newsletter The Macro Trader we are long SPY, LQD, HYG, DBV, and UDN

If you’re getting value out of our posts, you can do us a favor by linking to us and mentioning The Macro Trader to friends and co-workers. Here’s the link information for this article:
Title: Give Me Fuel Give Me Fire
URL: http://www.themacrotrader.com/2009/10/01/macro-give-me-fuel-give-me-fire/

Volatility Indexes, Risk Appetite, Mispriced Risk, And Where We Think We Are Headed

If over the past six months or so it has seemed as if you were partying like it was 1999 it might be time to reevaluate your stance.  One thing that we have been taking a closer look at lately is the pricing of risk.  Obviously when investors think that risks are low they will demonstrate risk seeking behavior.  We have seen this as the SP500 has climbed 56.6% from the March lows to the highs on 8/28/09.  With a rise like that you would think that 2008 never happened, of course if you believe that then you also believe  in a land of make believe with money trees, the fountain of youth, and SI models for all of us.

Of course some investors counter saying that while things could be better we are seeing the beginning of a recovery.  They then say that while the market will likely climb slower, that it will still climb higher.

While the above scenario is possible, anything is possible.  The more important question is to decide if the rewards outweigh the risk involved in being long equities right now.  Or even if at this point the better risk reward trade is to the downside.

Lets look at a few “risk gauges” or “fear indexes” as the press likes to call volatility indexes.  The first is of course the VIX.  After spiking to all time highs in October and November of 2008 we are already well on our way towards what was considered a “normal” level back in early 2008 before Bear Stearns.  The potential risks were obviously very mispriced at the beginning of 2008, are they mispriced again?  While likely not as off as they were at the beginning of 2008 we still think that there are a lot more real and potential risks then the market is currently pricing in. (Click on chart to enlarge)

SP500 VIX

sp500-vix

What about foreign markets?  How do investors perceive the potential risks abroad?  Well if the VDAX is any gauge then investors see a rosy future in Europe as well.  Again maybe there are no big risks and maybe the EU is rock solid.  Then again maybe not.  With the complete lack of liquidity that businesses have had over the past several months in the EU it is really surprising that the VDAX is back to pre-crisis levels. (Click on chart to enlarge)

German DAX VIX

dax-vix-volatility-index

What about other asset classes?  What are investors saying about potential risks?  Using the MOVE Index which measures the range in which Treasury yields are expected to move over the next 12-months we can see that even here investors are becoming increasingly complacent.  What happened to the runaway inflation that we keep hearing is right around the corner?  Right now the market is saying that we will be in a 130 basis point range for the next 12-months. In The Macro Trader weekly newsletter we are long the TLT 20+ Year Treasury ETF and are expecting a bigger move then is currently implied via the MOVE index. (Click on chart to enlarge)

MOVE Index

move-index-merrill-option-volatility-index-treasuries

Even in the currency markets we are seeing extreme complacency.  Apparently investors the world over are back to selling dollars in exchange for anything.  While the USD has its issues other currencies do to.  Right now the currency markets are not participating in the Keynes beauty pageant where you are trying to pick the girl that you think the judges will think is the beautiful.  No, with the current state of the global economy we are in the least ugly pig contest where we are only trying to find the least ugly.  That being said investors do not appear to see a lot of volatility any time soon. (Click on chart to enlarge)

JPM G-7 VIX

jpmvxyg7-g-7-volatility-index

Even the emerging market currency volatility index is showing complacency. What happened to the banking issues in Eastern Europe? Apparently they vanished, or at least that is what it seems as though the market is telling us.  (Click on chart to enlarge)

JPM Emerging Market FX VIX

jpmvxyem-emerging-market-volatility-index

Even commodities markets are pricing in realtively low risk. While the price history of the Crude Oil and Gold volatility indexes does not go back as far as we would like, you can get a feel for what is happening as both indexes are dropping at a very steady rate.  Do investors really think that volatility will stay that low?  What happened to the oil spike if demand comes back?  And what happens if gold breaks $1000 on fears of hyper inflation?  (Click on charts to enlarge)

Crude Oil VIX

ovx-oil-volatility-index

Gold VIX

gvz-gold-volatility-index

Another excellent tool to evaluate the blind risk taking happening right now in the stock market is the JunkDEX invented by Bill Luby over at VIX and More.  By taking an equal weighting of junk stocks AIG, FNM, C, CIT, and BAC you can see how crazy or composed investors are acting. While we have seen, and actually use, an index of high momentum stocks we had never thought of making an index that tracks junk stocks to gauge investors risk appetite.

As you can see in the chart of the JunkDEX below the junk led the market off the bottom and then lagged until the last month when the index shot up +157.36% in a little over a month.  While it has pulled back over the last two days we are still in awe that investors are dumb enough to buy this junk at these prices. (Click on chart to enlarge)

VIX and More JunkDEX* vs SP500

junkdex-vs-sp500-2009

After looking at all of this we need to ask ourselves if the rewards outweigh the risk to stay long?  Or if we should be flat or short.  In case you have not guessed we currently think that the risk reward is pointing to the downside.

Looking at the QQQQ we have a setup with a solid risk to reward situation. As you can see in the chart below the QQQQ has rallied back to its 50% retracement level, its 200-week moving average, and its downtrend line extending from October 2007.  While it could of course rally higher we like the risk reward enough to have put on a modest short position in our weekly Macro Trader newsletter. (Click on chart to enlarge)

QQQQ-NASDAQ 100 ETF

qqqq-weekly-chart-short-setup

While not quite as nice of a setup as the NASDAQ 100, the SP500 also looks like a solid risk reward trade to the short side.  As you can see in the chart below of the SPY-SP500 ETF it has rallied up to the upper Bollinger Band and has already started to come back in.  We are looking for a move back to at least the $95-96 area. (Click on chart to enlarge)

SPY SP500 ETF

spy-sp500-etf-daily-chart

Obviously anything can happen.  The market could go up every day for the next year, or it could go down every day, but our job as traders is to look for the best risk to reward scenarios that we can find and place trades on probable scenarios and right now we think the most likely scenario is for the market to at least have a pullback if not a correction back towards its 200-day moving average.  Of course if this happens we will see the volatility indexes tick upwards to more realistic levels given our current economic environment.

*Our JunkDEX differs a bit from the one you can see at VIX and More.  After looking into it we found that  we built the index by simulating a $1000 investment in the index and in the SPY and Bill built it by normalizing the index starting value so we have slightly different values.  But don’t worry as the chart looks essentially the same and shows the same investor insanity.

Happy Trading,

Dave@TheMacroTrader.com

Disclaimer-In The Macro Trader newsletter as well as our accounts we are currently short some QQQQ-NASDAQ 100 ETF and long some TLT 20+ Year Treasury ETF.

If you’re getting value out of our posts, you can do us a favor by linking to us and mentioning The Macro Trader to friends and co-workers. Here’s the link information for this article:
Title: Volatility Indexes, Risk Appetite, Mispriced Risk, And Where We Think We Are Headed
URL: http://www.themacrotrader.com/2009/09/02/mispriced-risk-macro-trader

Global Interest Rate Trends

One of our favorite, as well as one of the best indicators that investors can follow is that of interest rates.  Since we are global macro traders we follow interest rates across the globe for every country that we can find reliable data.  We track short and long rates for 58 different countries for use in many of our models as well as for other indicators like global and regional yield curves.

As you can see in the chart below (click to enlarge) short term rates for the G-10 are low.  In fact right now there are five countries that are following a zirp (zero interest rate policy) and consequently their 90 day rates are down under .5%.

G-10 Short Term Interest Rates

g-10-short-term-interest-rates

After dropping significantly throughout the second half of 2008 as Government Bonds went into the stratosphere, rates have since recovered quite a bit during 2009.  As we mentioned in a previous post on Treasury Bonds we think that just like rates overshot to the downside they have also overshot to the upside.  With recent comments by the Fed that essentially said that they will not be raising rates for the next year…or two, we are a bit taken back by the sell off in Treasuries the past few days.  (click to enlarge)

G-10 Long Term Interest Rates

g-10-long-term-interest-rates

The chart below  (click to enlarge) shows the average 90-Day and 10-Year government yield for the G-10.  In our view this chart shows how the ECB was very slow to lower rates while still preoccupied with the fear of inflation in the fall of 2008.  Looking back, and even at the time, this view was ludicrous as everything on the planet was dropping like a rock.  In fact the world at one point had lost 42% of its wealth.  Obvioulsy rates were eventually lowered but we were, and still are a bit amazed by the lack of understanding shown at the depths of the crisis by Jean Claude Trichet and his crew.

G-10 Short and Long Rates

g-10-short-and-long-term-interest-rates

Here is the chart (click to enlarge) of the G-10 GDP weighted yield curve.  As you can see it is extremely steep with the spread at 2.63% after having been negative back in late 2007.  Remember back in 2007 when people were saying that this time it was different and that the economy was great?  Well they were wrong and the yield curve gave a big neon flashing warning signal.  We were fortunate in that by heeding its cry we were able to not only preserve capital but actually generate positive returns in 2007 and 2008.

G-10 GDP Weighted Yield Curve

g-10-gdp-weighted-yield-curve

Finally here is the Global GDP Weighted Yield Curve (click to enlarge).  Using the country weightings in the MSCI index it is made up of 40 different countries. It has hit new highs this week at 2.20%.

Global GDP Weighted Yield Curve

global-gdp-weighted-yield-curve

Happy Trading,

The Macro Trader

Dave@TheMacroTrader.com

TheMacroTrader.com

If you’re getting value out of our posts, you can do us a favor by linking to us and mentioning The Macro Trader to friends and co-workers. Here’s the link information for this article:
Title: Global Interest Rate Trends
URL: http://www.themacrotrader.com/2009/07/16/global-interest-rates

Deflation And What We Are Doing About It

We decided that it was worth sharing our views of the inflation/deflation debate with all of our readers.  In our weekly newsletter we are already positioned to take advantage of some of the current as well as potential trends that will benefit from our scenario.

The following are our views on different parts of the puzzle that show that we are currently in, and will likely be experiencing deflation for longer then most people seem to think.

Savings-

Here are some interesting, and unfortunately not surprising, savings rate numbers.  The current savings rate is 5.7%, the all time high in 5/1/75 was 14.6%, the all time low was in 8/1/05 with a savings rate of -2.7%, the historical average is 6.8%, and the 10-Year average is 1.7%.  As you can see in the chart the past year has seen a huge uptick in the savings rate as consumers are trying to pay off debt and save some money.

Personal Saving Rate

personal-savings-rate

Of course as savings go up spending goes down.  While this is good for the individual household it is a negative for the overall economy as it means less money is being spent on items from housing to cars to clothes.  While this could just be an abnormal blip in the scheme of things there are several reasons to think that this time the trend will hold for a while.

Baby boomers as a group don’t have anywhere near the funds to retire.  After 2008 wiped out 42% of the worlds wealth they should be scared and saving for their rapidly approaching retirements.  Once the economy starts to pick up they may very well start spending like it was 1999 again but we don’t think that they will because while most people are ok with the idea of working a bit past the age of 65, they do not plan on working into their 80′s and 90′s.

If the savings rate gets back up to the historical average of 6.8% or higher and then stays there for a while, it will be a huge drag on the economy. As consumers buy less and less, pricing will likely come down.  We are already seeing this in the form of huge sales in stores across the nation.  Many retailers have already had several markdown sales and it is safe to assume that this trend will continue for at least the next year or so.  If our projections are right and the savings rate gets back to “normal” we will likely see a re-pricing as most businesses just accept that fact that their profit margins will be smaller going forward.

Housing-

The monthly proclamations of a bottom by the NAR notwithstanding we have yet to see anything resembling a bottom in real estate. The Case Shiller 10-City index is down 33% from its peak and the 20-City index is down 32%.  Both charts look the same, which is to say each month is lower then the last month.  So far there has been no bottom.

Case Shiller 10-City Index

case-shiller-10-city-index-csxr

Not surprisingly housing sales numbers don’t look much better.  In spite of the monthly bottom calling we continue to see more new lows every few months.  As you can see in the chart below we are just off of new all time lows since the data series started in 1963.

SA Housing Sales

sa-housing-sales-hit-a-new-historic-low-since-series-began

Zooming in a bit you can see that while we have had several blips over the last few years none of them have lasted for more then a few months and all have led to new lows. Our best guess is that we are headed lower in the next few months.

SA Housing Sales-A Closer Look

sa-housing-sales-each-of-these-were-supposed-to-be-the-new-bottom

As if residential housing was not enough, the commercial real estate market is playing catch up.  Residential peaked in June 2006 and commercial held up until October of 2007.  Since October of last year however commercial has made a valiant effort to catch up and is now down -29.48% since then.  In fact from March to April alone it dropped -8.62%.  If real estate has found at bottom it is keeping its location secret because none of the data that we have seen points to it.

Moody’s REAL Commercial Property Price Index Composite(CPPI)

moodys-real-commercial-real-property-price-index-down-29

Of course you may be thinking that there has to be some commercial real estate that has found a bottom.  This may be the case on a geographic basis but it is definitely not the case when it comes to segments of the commercial market.  As you can see in the chart below industrial is the strongest part of the market and yet it is still down -14.26% from its highs.  Apartments are next being down -19.01%, followed by retail which is down -23.11%, and finally office space which is down a whopping -30.22%.  Judging by the massive drop this last quarter it is safe to assume that we have a ways to go before we really hit the bottom.

Moody’s REAL Commercial Property Price Indices
moodys-real-commercial-property-indexes-apartments-industrial-office-retail

Employment-

In case you haven’t noticed employment has been horrible and getting worse.  One of the newest “in indicators” is the exhaustion rate.  While this indicator is not new it has luckily not garnered much attention over the years because it only gives a real signal once or twice a decade.  The exhaustion rate is the rate at which people come off, or exhaust, their unemployment benefits without having securing a job.  Why is this the “it indicator” right now?  Well if you look at the chart below you can see that we are not only at all time highs but are actually at 49.23%.  Yes, that means that almost half of the unemployed are done receiving unemployment money.  That of course leads to even less money to spend on anything.

Exhaustion Rate

unemployment-claims-exhaustion-rate

After looking at the exhaustion rate chart it should come as now surprise that unemployment is high.  In fact it is at its second highest level ever at 9.4%.  As bad as unemployment is right now, it is going to get worse before it gets better.  We will likely hit at least 11% ,and we would not be surprised to see 12-14% unemployment before jobs data bottoms out.

Unemployment Rate

historical-unemployment-rate

At this point it should not be much of a surprise but as you can see in the chart below, average weekly hours and non farm payrolls data are also both declining on a year over year basis.

Average Weekly Hours and Non Farm Payrolls

weekly-hours-and-non-farm-payrolls

So how does all of this effect deflation?  If people are not working then they are not able to spend as much on consumer goods and services.  That includes clothing, food, entertainment, transportation, etc.  If they stay unemployed long enough and fall off of their unemployment benefits then they are able to spend even less.  Along with the lack of, or at least severely impaired, spending power there is a host of other side effects, which includes everything from defaulting on credit cards to defaulting on their mortgages.  As consumers spend less, businesses have to lay off more employees as sales drop off and margins are squeezed with exacerbates the situation.  One consistent relationship is that of the unemployment rate and capacity utilization.  As unemployment rises, capacity utilization drops as demand falls out.

Unemployment and Capacity Utilization (inverted)

unemployment-and-capacity-utilization1

If there is no demand then there is no spending.  If no one is spending then there can be no inflation.  If things are contracting then we are in deflation.  One more indicator that shows this is that of the output gap. The output gap is the difference between the amount that we can produce and the amount that we are currently producing.  In the chart below a positive number indicates under-utilization, and negative numbers reflect over-utilization.  If the line is rising things are getting worse and if it is declining things are improving.  As you can see the line has risen quite a bit and at least for now is showing no signs of turning around.  The output gap is a good indication of available demand.  As you can see. the output gap is bad and getting worse as demand continues to decline.

5-Year Output Gap
5-year-output-gap-chart

Banking-

While we could go on and on about banking we will try and keep it short.  Most people are pointing to the charts from the Fed on bank reserves and saying that they will cause hyper inflation.  Yes, the monetary base is at historic highs but guess what?  Until that money is actually in circulation it does not cause inflation.  You can print ten quadrillion dollars but if you bury it in a hole then it does not cause inflation.

Look at the chart below of the Adjusted Reserves.  As you can see it is at record high levels.  While it is extremely high it is not in circulation yet and likely will not make it to consumers for some time.

Adjusted Reserves

adjusted-reserves

This number is extremely high due to all of the money that has been printed over the past year in response to the financial crisis.  But the inflationistas are missing one important point, namely that until banks have rebuilt their reserves they will not be lending.  As long as residential and commercial mortgage defaults continue banks will continue to rebuild their balance sheets.  Once they have a stable asset base they will start lending and we will likely see some really high inflation but until then we will be in a deflationary environment as the money is not being put into circulation.

Commodities-

Commodities are another reason that many use to justify their inflation arguments.  After having a good bull market from the end of 2002 until fall of 2007, they took off and got a bit parabolic for the first half of 2008 before crashing and coming back to levels not seen since 2002. Of course as anyone who has filled up their gas tank knows, commodities have started to climb once again moving from 200 up to 250 from the March lows.

Commodity Research Bureau Index

weekly-crb-index

The rise has been widespread with energy, base metals, agriculturals, and even precious metals rising considerably.  Aside from precious metals it appears as though the primary reason that we had such a strong rebound was due to buying out of China.  In the first two quarters of the year the Chinese government decided to use some of their surplus to buy raw materials.  They bought a lot of copper, secured oil contracts, and stocked up on everything else.  Now it appears as though their buying is slowing to a trickle of what it was and with the run up in prices they are taking a break as they will likely get to buy more at lower levels.

While the buying out of China may help commodities put in a bottom, it does not appear as though it will drive them much higher.  With the possible exceptions of precious metals and energy we see most commodities turning in flat to slightly negative results for the rest of the year.  With the demand destruction that we have seen over the past year commodities have a tough road ahead of them before they will be able to climb higher.

Deflation-

So where does all this leave us?  Demand has been absolutely crushed on several fronts:  People are finally saving and paying down debt instead of spending.  Real estate is still falling, and with inventories as high as they are, will likely not fully recover for years.  Employment is as bad as at any time in the Post WW2 era.  Banks are still impaired and unable/scared to lend.  And with all this demand destruction commodities are unlikely to continue upwards for a while.

Finally there is the matter that while we can speculate on inflation we are currently in deflation as can be seen in the chart below of the CPI.  We have officially been in deflation for the last three months and while it might slowdown a bit we will likely stay in a deflationary environment for longer then most people think.

CPI-YoY % Change 1922-Now

cpi

What are we doing?

So if we believe that we are in deflation what do we do about it?  The best deflation trade that we have found is to be long bonds.  As we stated in our last blog post as well as the last few newsletter we are long TLT-20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF.  Not only are we in deflation but the trade was decent on its own merits.

Real yields on Treasury bonds at the end of May were at their highest levels since February 1995 and right now they are at 4.76% for the 10-Year and 5.58% for the 30-Year.  In an environment where we expect most assets to fall or go nowhere, we think that Treasury Bonds offer good value.

10-Year Treasury Bond Real Yield

10-year-treasury-real-yield

Treasury bonds got almost as oversold recently as they were overbought back at the end of 2008.  By normalizing the trend using a 200-day moving average we build reversion to the mean charts that show how far above or below securities are from their mean.  In the case of the long bond our charts showed that it was extremely oversold and that it was a good time to start building a position.

TYX-30-Year Treasury Bond Yield Reversion to the Mean Chart

tyx-reversion-to-the-mean

Looking at the chart of the TLT we could see it running up into the 100-105 range over the next month or two as investors take advantage of deflation, the oversold conditions, and the favorable real yield.

TLT 20+ Year Treasury ETF

tlt-long-term-treasury-etf

While the long bond is definitely our favorite deflation trade, it also makes some sense to go long the US Dollar and/or the Japanese Yen as investors flock towards safety.  Other trades would be to short stocks and short commodities in anticipation of them falling as demand continues to decline and margins shrink.

And what about inflation?  We actually do believe that eventually all of this printed money will lead to some hefty inflation but right now we are in deflation.   Additionally the inflation trade is  the most overcrowded and one sided trade in the financial markets right now.  If we are right we will do well, and with the aid of risk management if we are wrong we will be stopped out for a small loss.

Happy Trading,

The Macro Trader

Dave@TheMacroTrader.com

Disclaimer-We currently hold positions in TLT

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